Presenters

Marius Gramb

University of Cologne

I am a PhD candidate at the University of Cologne working in the field of applied microeconomic theory.

I am currently working on projects involving dynamic games, evolutionary game theory and matching markets. Further research interests of me are mechanism design and auction theory.

Neha Gupta

University of St. Gallen

Postdoctoral researcher, Visualization manager and a lecturer at Institute of Economics, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland (FGN-HSG).

My research interests includes applied economics, causal econometrics, empirical microeconomics, urban and development economics, monetary economics.

Christin Hoffmann

Brandenburg University of Technology Cottbus

Stefanie J. Huber

University of Amsterdam

Stefanie J. Huber is an Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Amsterdam, and a Tinbergen Institute candidate fellow. She completed her Ph.D. in 2017 in the field of macroeconomics at Universitat Pompeu Fabra and graduated that same year from the European Doctoral Program (EDP). Her current research focuses primarily on behavioral macroeconomics, housing, and household finance.

Diego Kaenzig

London Business School

I am a PhD candidate at London Business School. My research interests are in business cycles and macroeconomic policy. In my research, I study the role of energy and climate change for financial and macroeconomic fluctuations and how economic inequality and household finance matter for the macroeconomy and macroeconomic policy. My research highlights that climate change and inequality also have important implications for the business cycle, above and beyond the significant long-run effects.

Hisaki Kono

Kyoto University

I am an Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University. My primary research fields are Development Economics, including the contract design of credit and insurance products, education, trade, economic integration, market structure, and poverty reduction.

Peter Kjær Kruse-Andersen

University of Copenhagen

I am an assistant professor at the Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen. My main areas of research are economic growth and environmental economics.

Bohdan Kukharskyy

City University of New York

Assistant Professor

Should countries decouple from global value chains to reduce their exposure to adverse foreign shocks? To find out what our research shows, check out the media briefing.

Dohyeon Lee

UC Santa Cruz

I received my Ph.D. in Economics from University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2020, and currently a research associate at UC Santa Cruz. My research fields include macroeconomics, international economics, and firm dynamics. In my current job market paper, I explain why the entry rate of new firms can decline without any exogenous forces, which also leads to the productivity slowdown at the extensive margin.